Singapore Open (golf)
| Tournament information | |
|---|---|
| Location |  Singapore | 
| Established | 1961 | 
| Course(s) | Sentosa Golf Club (Serapong course) | 
| Par | 71 | 
| Length | 7,372 yards (6,741 m) | 
| Tour(s) | Asian Tour Japan Golf Tour | 
| Format | Stroke play | 
| Prize fund | US$1,000,000 | 
| Month played | January | 
| Current champion | |
|  Song Young-han | |


The Singapore Open is a golf tournament in Singapore that has been sanctioned by the Asian Tour from that tour's inception in 1995, the European Tour from 2009 to 2012, and the Japan Golf Tour since 2016.
It was founded in 1961 and was staged annually until 2001, when it was won by Thaworn Wiratchant. It was then cancelled for lack of sponsorship. Other winners in the years leading up to this included American Shaun Micheel in 1998, who went on to win the 2003 PGA Championship.
The Singapore Golf Association initially hoped to revive the event after skipping only one year, but the tournament was not resuscitated until 2005, when sponsorship was secured from the Sentosa Leisure Group. The 2005 prize fund was $2 million, which made the Singapore Open by far the richest tournament exclusive to the Asian Tour that was not co-sanctioned by the European Tour, a status it retained until the European Tour first co-sanctioned the event in 2009. Asian Tour chief executive Louis Martin claimed when the revival of the tournament was announced, "Competing for a prize purse of two million US dollars will give our playing membership a huge boost and elevate the Asian Tour to a new level." The 2005 event was played in September.
The 2006 Singapore Open offered a purse of US$3 million with a winner's share of US$475,000. In May 2006 it was announced that Barclays Bank would sponsor the event for five years from 2006 and that the prize fund will be increased to US$4 million in 2007 and US$5 million in 2008.[1] In 2011, the purse was US$6,000,000.
The 2013 edition was cancelled due to lack of sponsorship and the event's future was unclear.[2]
After a three-year absence, the tournament is returned in January 2016. The event is co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour and Japan Golf Tour.[3] It features Sumitomo Mitsui Bank as title sponsor and has a US$1 million purse.
Winners
- Co-sanctioned by the Japan Golf Tour
| Year | Champion | Country | Score | To par | Margin of victory | Runner-up | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20161 | Song Young-han |  South Korea | 272 | −12 | 1 stroke |  Jordan Spieth | 
1 Tournament to finish on Monday due to inclement weather
- 2013–15 No tournament
- Co-sanctioned by the European Tour
| Year | Champion | Country | Score | To par | Margin of victory | Runner-up | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Matteo Manassero |  Italy | 271 | −13 | Playoff |  Louis Oosthuizen | 
| 2011 | Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño |  Spain | 199* | −14 | Playoff |  Juvic Pagunsan | 
| 2010 | Adam Scott (3) |  Australia | 267 | −17 | 3 strokes |  Anders Hansen | 
| 2009 | Ian Poulter |  England | 274 | −10 | 1 stroke |  Liang Wen-Chong | 
* 2011 tournament shortened to 54 holes due to weather
- Prior to European Tour co-sanctioning
- 2008 Jeev Milkha Singh –  India India
- 2007 Ángel Cabrera –  Argentina Argentina
- 2006 Adam Scott (2) –  Australia Australia
- 2005 Adam Scott –  Australia Australia
- 2002-04 No tournament
- 2001 Thaworn Wiratchant –  Thailand Thailand
- 2000 Jyoti Randhawa –  India India
- 1999 Kenny Druce –  Australia Australia
- 1998 Shaun Micheel –  United States United States
- 1997 Zaw Moe –  Myanmar Myanmar
- 1996 John Kernohan –  United States United States
- 1995 Steven Conran –  Australia Australia
- 1994 Kyi Hla Han –  Myanmar Myanmar
- 1993 Paul Moloney –  Australia Australia
- 1992 Bill Israelson –  United States United States
- 1991 Jack Kay –  Canada Canada
- 1990 Antolin Fernando –  Philippines Philippines
- 1989 Lu Chien-soon (2) –  Taiwan Taiwan
- 1988 Greg Bruckner –  United States United States
- 1987 Peter Fowler –  Australia Australia
- 1986 Greg Turner –  New Zealand New Zealand
- 1985 Chen Tze-ming –  Taiwan Taiwan
- 1984 Tom Sieckmann –  United States United States
- 1983 Lu Chien-soon –  Taiwan Taiwan
- 1982 Hsu Sheng-san –  Taiwan Taiwan
- 1981 Mya Aye –  Myanmar Myanmar
- 1980 Kurt Cox –  United States United States
- 1979 Lu Hsi-chuen –  Taiwan Taiwan
- 1978 Terry Gale –  Australia Australia
- 1977 Hsu Chi-san –  Taiwan Taiwan
- 1976 Kesahiko Uchida –  Japan Japan
- 1975 Yutaka Suzuki –  Japan Japan
- 1974 Eleuterio Nival –  Philippines Philippines
- 1973 Ben Arda (2) –  Philippines Philippines
- 1972 Takaaki Kono –  Japan Japan
- 1971 Haruo Yasuda –  Japan Japan
- 1970 Hsieh Yung-yo (2) –  Taiwan Taiwan
- 1969 Tomio Kamada –  Japan Japan
- 1968 Hsieh Yung-yo –  Taiwan Taiwan
- 1967 Ben Arda –  Philippines Philippines
- 1966 Ross Newdick –  New Zealand New Zealand
- 1965 Frank Phillips (2) –  Australia Australia
- 1964 Ted Ball –  Australia Australia
- 1963 Alan Brookes – .svg.png) South Africa South Africa
- 1962 Brian Wilkes – .svg.png) South Africa South Africa
- 1961 Frank Phillips –  Australia Australia
See also
- Singapore Masters - a golf tournament which is co-sanctioned by the Asian and European Tours
References
- ↑ Barclays Take up Title Sponsorship of the Singapore Open, asiantour.com, 23 May 2006.
- ↑ Nair, Sanjay (19 July 2013). "Golf: No Singapore Open in 2013, but tournament will be held early next year". The Straits Times.
- ↑ "Singapore Open to return in 2016". Asian Tour. 28 January 2015.
External links
- Official site
- Coverage on the Asian Tour's official site
- Coverage on the European Tour's official site
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Coordinates: 1°18′N 103°48′E / 1.3°N 103.8°E